Causes of the Panic Reserve inflation of a peculiarly objectionable type.” 15 Bear Tactics and Outside Calling of Loans The Chronicle assigned yet other causes to the panic: “The latter part of September, however, some of the large groups of operators, having accom- plished their purpose in carrying prices to new extremes, began unloading their holdings, and this had the effect of weakening the market . . . but after the decline had been going on for several weeks, there came an entirely new development, namely, the calling of loans on a huge scale, not by the banks themselves, but by the mongrel crowd of outside lenders.” The first was doubtless true; stocks passed from strong to weak holders. The second, the withdrawal of funds in many cases came from the banks first, which caused outside lenders and brokers to call their loans. It soon lost most of its significance in the fact that by this time the demand also fell off; if the supply of funds had been cut off more than the demand, money rates would have risen and they did not. Margins Not Figured Scientifically A series of causes of the panic was described by Fred I. Kent, Director of the Bankers’ Trust Com- pany of New York in his address before the Ameri-